Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton exchanged barbs over immigration
at the final presidential debate on Wednesday.

The Republican presidential nominee laid out his border security
plan, pointing out that he would build a border wall and
force Mexico to pay for the wall in order to attempt to keep out
potential criminals.

"We have some bad hombres here, and we're going to get them out,"
Trump said.

While Clinton pointed out that she would provide a pathway to
citizenship for the 11 million undocumented immigrants
living in the US illegally, she also ripped into Trump's previous
proposal to create a deportation force to forcibly remove
millions of immigrants.

"You would have to have a massive law enforcement presence," she
said. "Where law enforcement officers would be going school to
school, home to home, business to business, rounding up people
who are undocumented. And then we would have to put them on
trains, on buses.

Clinton added: "I think that is an idea that is not in
keeping with who we are as a nation. I think it's an idea
that would rip our country apart."

Clinton also mocked Trump's failure to insist on Mexico paying
for the border wall during his meeting with Mexican
President Enrique Peña Nieto earlier this year.

"When it comes to the wall that Donald talks about building," she
said. "He went to Mexico, he had a meeting with the Mexican
president — didn't even raise it. He choked, and then got into a
Twitter war when the Mexican president said he wouldn't pay for
it."

Trump defended his meeting with Peña Nieto, and noted that Clinton
supported former President George W. Bush's comprehensive
immigration reform bill in 2006, which would've increased border
security and provide a pathway to citizenship for the 11 million
immigrants living in the US without permission.

"She voted for the wall," Trump said. "She never gets
anything done, so naturally it didn't get built."